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Wednesday, January 28, 2015

There comes a time when you just have to stand back and
take a look at the big picture. This is one of those times. On
the morning of December 10th 2004, 49 year old, Gary Webb was found
dead in his modest, recently sold Carmichael, California home. Webb
allegedly died from two *self-inflicted* gunshot wounds to the head
from a .38 caliber pistol. The Sacramento coroner, Mr. Lyons,
hastily ruled Webb’s death a suicide heralded by his now infamous
pronouncement: “It’s unusual in a suicide case to have two shots,”
he said, “but it has been done in the past, and it is in fact a
distinct possibility.” Which brings up another possibility, as the
Gershwin song goes, that “it ain’t necessarily so.” I’m referring
to the lingering and distinct possibility– no make that probability–
that Gary Webb was murdered.

While I agree with Mr. Lyons that it’s unusual for a
suicide to “have two shots” notice how cleverly Mr. Lyons fails to
mention another more important detail such as it’s virtually impossible
to have a suicide case with two shots to the head via a .38
revolver? Think about that for a moment. Doesn’t this deceptive
statement make one suspicious that a well orchestrated, top-down
cover-up operation is underway? Or is this merely a minor oversight
by a government official whose expertise is determining the cause
of death? Here’s what the iconoclastic, egdy, political commentator
Vox had to say on December 23, 2004 about Webb’s alleged ‘suicide’
that had occurred only a few days prior (posted on his website
www.voxfux.com).